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Selahattin Demirtaş

Selahattin Demirtaş
Selahattin Demirtaş (audio speaker iconTurkish pronunciation (help·info); born 10 -04-1973) is a Turkish-Kurdish politician and author and a former member of the parliament of Turkey. He was co-leader of the left-wing pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), serving alongside Figen Yüksekdağ from 2014 to 2018.
Demirtaş was the presidential candidate of the HDP in the 2014 presidential election, coming in third place. He led the HDP to gather 13.1% at the June 2015 parliament elections and 10.7% in the snap elections in November 2015, coming 4th in each election. He has been imprisoned since 4 November 2016 and despite his imprisonment the HDP fielded Demirtaş as its candidate for the 2018 presidential election, running his campaign from prison.
In a judgement given in December 2020, the European Court for Human Rights judged that, given the timing of [Demirtaş] continued detention (coinciding with an important constitutional referendum and the presidential election) and Turkey's systemic trend of “gagging” dissenting voices, Demirtaş's continued pre-trial detention's political purpose had been predominant.
Early life and education
Demirtaş was of Zaza origin He was born in Palu and completed his primary and secondary education there. From 1991 he studied maritime commerce and management at the Dokuz Eylül University, where he would face political problems that would force him to leave school without finishing his degree. He returned to Diyarbakır and retook the university entrance exam in 1993, after which he enrolled at the Ankara University Law Faculty.
Professional career
After his graduation, Demirtaş worked as a freelance lawyer for a while. In 2000 he became a member of the executive committee at the Diyarbakır branch of the Human Rights Association (IHD). The IHD Chair at the time was Osman Baydemir who was elected as the mayor of Diyarbakır at the following local election. Demirtaş replaced him as the chair of the Diyarbakır IHD in 2004. During his term as chair, the association focused heavily on the increasing unsolved political murders in Turkey.
He cites his experience at the funeral of politician and human right lawyer Vedat Aydın (1953–1991) as a political awakening:
I became a different person. My life's course changed … although I didn't fully understand the reason behind the events, now I knew: we were Kurds, and since this wasn't an identity I would toss away, this was also my problem.
From international observers often dubbed as a Kurdish Obama Demirtaş started his political career as a member of the Democratic Society Party (DTP) in 2007 at which time he stood as one of the 'Thousand Hope Candidates' for the DTP and several other democratic organizations in Turkey. He was elected to the 23rd Parliament and became the Parliamentary Chief Officer for the party at the age of 34. As such he supported the abolition of the restrictions against education in the Kurdish language and demanded equal rights for Turks and Kurds in the Turkish constitution.
The DTP was closed down by a Supreme Court order in 2009 for the parties alleged connections to the PKK, and the DTP MPs moved to the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP). The BDP held its first congress in 2010 and elected Selahattin Demirtaş and Gültan Kışanak as its new co-chairs. Demirtaş contested the 2011 elections as part of the joint 'Labor, Democracy and Freedom' list endorsed by the BDP and 18 different democratic political organizations, this time for Hakkari. He was re-elected to parliament as an independent.
At a rally in the Kızıltepe district of Mardin in November 2012, Demirtaş criticized the Turkish police for intervening after marchers carried posters of Abdullah Öcalan, saying I call on you, those who are not bothered about the Kurds’ killer Evren’s statue being erected [or by] schools named after Evren. If they [Kurds] cannot hang Öcalan’s poster in Kurdistan, then where would they hang it? We will go further and erect his statue. In 2019, Demirtaş defended his statement in court, arguing that he was responding to how posters were met with panzers and truncheons, and that he is opposed to erecting statues of Öcalan.
Opposition leader
Peace process 2013
Votes obtained by Demirtaş throughout the 81 Provinces of Turkey in the 2014 presidential election
Demirtaş was the co-chair of BDP during the period when the peace process and negotiations kick-started in Turkey. He was one of the BDP politicians who met Öcalan on Imrali island during the peace negotiations.
2014 Presidential campaign
In 2014 Demirtaş and Figen Yüksekdağ were elected as the co-chairs of the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) – a new initiative originating from a three-year-old coalition of the BDP and various different political parties and organization under the auspices of the Peoples' Democratic Congress (HDK) - for the 2014 presidential elections of Turkey, being one of three candidates and hoping to attract left-wing voters. He came third with 9.77% of the vote.
2014 Municipal elections
He stressed that gender equality and a women quota is preeminent in their party program for the elections and announced in October 2013, that for the Metropolis Diyarbakır a female mayor was planned. In the Municipal elections of 2014, Gültan Kisanak was elected the Mayor of Diyarbakir,[20] and Februnye Akyol Co-Mayor of Mardin.
June 2015 general elections
Demirtaş was co-leader along with Figen Yüksekdağ during the June 2015 Turkish general election, the party's first campaign in a general election. The HDP came in fourth place with 13.12% of the vote, breaking for the first time the 10% electoral threshold to enter the parliament, sending 80 HDP representative there out of 550 seats. The election results were largely perceived to be a surprise for the opposition, with the HDP having surpassed the election threshold by a healthy 3% of the vote despite many pollsters claiming that it was hovering at the 10% boundary.
HDP co-leader Demirtaş was widely seen as the victor of the election, in the sense that as well as exceeding many vote share projections, his party won the same amount of MPs (80 seats) as the Nationalist Movement Party. The international press characterized Demirtaş as the 'Kurdish Obama' and supporters of the HDP took to the street to celebrate their success on the evening of polling day. Celebrating the victory, Dermirtaş stated: From now on, the HDP is Turkey's party. HDP is Turkey, Turkey is HDP.
Other commentators noted the rising difficulties ahead, Demirtaş risking to be undercut by Occalan's political influence, the mechanical rise of anti-Kurdish sentiment among Turkey nationalist forces, and the need to not alienate tactical voters.
Peace talks collapse
Demirtas in Cizre
In July 2015, the peace process initiated by AKP and PKK leadership and facilitated by HDP collapsed. Demirtaş attributes this collapse to AKP, responding to the June election's votes loss to following parties, loss of its governing majority, and relative electoral defeat. According to Demirtaş, AKP bleeding votes in polls lead this party to reignited the war against PKK. In July 2015, observing an increase in violence between PKK-affiliated parties and Turkish authorities, Demirtaş opposed violence from both parties and called for a higher political autonomy in South-East Turkey.
March on Cizre
When in early September 2015 the Turkish authorities imposed a curfew on the city of Cizre HDP parliamentarians around Demirtas went on a march on Cizre, but were prevented from entering the city by the Turkish authorities who alleged security concerns. He was allowed in the city only after the curfew was lifted on the 12 September.
November 2015 general election
In August 2015, two months after the June 2015 general elections and one month after the return to military confrontation with PKK, early general election were announced for November 2015. HDP, lead by Demirtaş, came 3rd, securing 10,7% of the vote, merely passing the parliament's 10% threshold.
2016 to 2018 Presidential campaign
In May 2016, the Turkish parliament revoked the parliamentary immunity for several HDP politicians including the HDP leadership.
Following the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt, Demirtaş stated in his statement on 16 July that he was against the coup and that the attempt was an indication that there was still no democracy in Turkey. On July 25th, Erdogan invite and met with major opposition leaders, except HDP leadership and Dermirtaş.
On November 4th 2016, few months after the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt and in the mist of large scale purges, Demirtaş was arrested along with Figen Yüksekdağ and other HDP MPs, accused of spreading propaganda for militants fighting the Turkish state. Demirtaş stated he is not a manager, member, spokesperson, or sympathizer of the armed PKK group.
Demirtaş was officially announced as the candidate of the People's Democratic Party (#HDP# ) on May 4, 2018 for the presidential election, after members of the party had hinted at his candidacy weeks in advance. Party leader Pervin Buldan declared that Demirtaş, the jailed former co-chair of the HDP, would be leading a five-party Kurdish alliance into the general election. He received 8.4% of the votes.
Legal prosecution and detention
Initial arrest and motive
Demirtaş was arrested on 4 November 2016. The criminal indictment against Demirtaş alleged that in a public statement on the 6 October, the HDP raised support for protests against the approach the Turkish Government shows towards the Islamic State (IS) attack on Kobane.] The HDP was blamed for the Kobanî protests in 2014, which resulted in the death of over 50 people[43] despite it having called for an investigation on the events leading to the deaths in parliament which was turned down by the Governing alliance between the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) and the Justice and Development Party (AKP). President Recep Tayyip Erdogan blamed Demirtaş for provoking protests, and said that all Kurdish people are the citizens of Republic of Turkey, and no one can attempt to build a state for them.Demirtaş's repeatedly stated opposition to both PKK and TSK violences,[45] calling killed Turkish soldiers the children of this country, our children, and declaring No one has anything to win from a civil war in Turkey. Just look at Syria and Iraq.” His prosecution also used wiretaps as evidence to show relation with the Democratic Society Congress (DTK), which the prosecution views as a part of the PKK.
Main prosecution and appeals
On 18 January 2017, Turkish prosecutors announced they were seeking a 142-year prison sentence for Demirtaş and according to The New York Times, more than hundred charges have been brought against Demirtaş.
On the 7 September 2018 he was sentenced to 4 years and 8 months for a speech he had made at a Newroz celebration on the 20 March 2013.
On 20 November 2018 the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled Demirtaş should be released from preliminary detention, and ordered Turkey to pay him 25'000 Euros. On 30 November 2018 a court in Turkey ruled he shall remain detained despite the ECHR ruling to release him. According to the verdict by the Turkish court, the ruling of the ECHR was not definitive and therefore not binding. The sentence he received the 7 September 2018 was upheld on 4 December 2018 by an appeal court. On the 31 December 2018 the lawyers of Demirtaş appealed the sentence at the Constitutional Court.
2020 ECHR's judgement
On December 22, 2020, the ECHR condemns Turkey, calls for the “immediate release” of Selahattin Demirtaş. In its Chamber judgement, the ECHR concludes :
[the Court] held that the applicant’s continued pre-trial detention had also pursued a political purpose. In so holding, it had regard in particular to the applicant’s political role, the tense political situation in Turkey, the speeches targeting the applicant and his party, including those by the President of Turkey, the timing of his continued detention (coinciding with an important constitutional referendum and the presidential election) and the alleged emergence of a systemic trend of “gagging” dissenting voices. It went on to find that this political purpose had been predominant. the national authorities have repeatedly ordered the applicant’s continued detention on insufficient grounds consisting simply of a formulaic enumeration of the grounds for detention provided for by law, the Court finds that it has been established beyond reasonable doubt that the extensions of the applicant’s detention, especially during two crucial campaigns, namely the referendum and the presidential election, pursued the predominant ulterior purpose of stifling pluralism and limiting freedom of political debate, which is at the very core of the concept of a democratic society ...”
The 2020 judgement's summary states .
The Court noted the following factors: the measures to lift parliamentary immunity had only been taken after elections in which the ruling part [AKP] had lost its majority in the National Assembly; the only ones who had actually been affected by the constitutional amendment had been members of the opposition parties; [...] ; the timing of the applicant’s detention had meant that he had been deprived of his liberty in particular during two crucial campaigns (a referendum on significant constitutional reform and a presidential election); the circumstances surrounding the applicant’s return to pre-trial detention, in which an order was made in relation to a separate criminal investigation on the day of his release; and findings of other Council of Europe bodies on the independence of the judicial system in Turkey and the tense political climate which had created an environment capable of influencing certain national court decisions – especially during the state of emergency, when hundreds of judges were dismissed, and particularly in relation to criminal proceedings instituted against dissenters. These factors enabled the Court to conclude that the purposes put forward by the authorities for the applicant’s pre-trial detention had merely been a cover for an ulterior motive: namely, that of stifling pluralism and limiting freedom of political debate.
Other prosecutions
On the 17 March 2021, the state prosecutor Bekir Şahin demanded for him and 686 other HDP politicians a five-year ban to engage in politics together with a closure of the HDP due to alleged organizational cooperation with the PKK.
A few days later on the 22 March 2021, Demirtas was sentenced to three years and six months imprisonment for having insulted the Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan by mentioning he had fluttered from corridor to corridor trying to get a hold of Vladimir Putin during an international conference in Paris.
Detention conditions
Since 4 November 2016 he is detained in the prison in the F-Type prison Edirne,[48] a border town near Greece and Bulgaria, far away from Diyarbakır in South-Eastern Turkey, where his family lives at. His wife visits him once a week.[56] ECHR called for releasing Demirtaş and stated that his arrest in 2016 violated his freedom of speech and the right of joining to the elections. According to HDP speaker Saruhan Oluç, he is not allowed to receive visits by parliamentarians of the HDP. Since the COVID 19 pandemic his visitors rights are restricted to non-contact visits. As his wife informed the public on in an interview with Ismail Küçükkaya on FOX TV about it, the Radio and Television Supreme Council (RTÜK) initiated an investigation on the program due to her remarks.
Personal life
Demirtaş is married to Başak Demirtaş and is the father of two girls, Delal and Dılda. His parents are Tahir and Sadyie Demirtaş and he has six siblings.
Demirtaş has faced threats due to his political activity and on November 22, 2015 he survived an assassination attempt.
Publications
In detention, he wrote a book titled Seher containing short stories. The Turkish edition of Seher has reportedly sold more than 200,000 copies. He has also wrote the book Devran in prison. In 2020 the book Leylan was published and Demirtaş acknowledged he would prefer a career in literature than the one in politics.
Award
In November 2019, the Progressive Alliance awarded him their Political Courage Award. His wife Başak Demirtaş attended the award ceremony as he was still imprisoned at the time.[1]
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[1] Website | کوردیی ناوەڕاست | Wikipedia
Linked items: 16
Group: Biography
Articles language: English
Date of Birth: 10-04-1973 (51 Year)
Country of birth: North Kurdistan
Education: Law
Education level: University (Bachelor)
Language - Dialect: Kurdish - Zazaki
Language - Dialect: Turkish
Language - Dialect: English
Nation: Kurd
Party: BDP
People type: Jurist
People type: The politician
People type: Political prisoner
People type: Parliament Member
Place of birth: Amed
Place of Residence: Diaspora
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Item Quality: 99%
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Added by ( Hazhar Kamala ) on 29-03-2022
This article has been reviewed and released by ( Aras Eilnjaghi ) on 29-03-2022
This item recently updated by ( Rapar Osman Uzery ) on: 18-05-2024
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Content search
Kurdipedia is the largest multilingual sources for Kurdish information!
Biography
Raman Salah
Library
Building license report at the level of Iraqi Kurdistan Region 2012
Articles
The Reality of the Media in Kurdish Areas (Rojava)
Biography
Lisa Calan
Library
Statistics of construction licence in Kurdistan Region of Iraq 2013-2018
Archaeological places
Shemzinan Bridge
Biography
Shilan Fuad Hussain
Archaeological places
Hassoun Caves
Image and Description
Picture of Kurdish school children, Halabja in south Kurdistan 1965
Biography
Rez Gardi
Biography
Haval Hussein Saeed
Library
Internal trade Survey in private sector in Iraq and Kurdistan Region 2012-2013
Articles
Paolo Ferrero: Rojava is a legacy for humanity, we must defend it!
Biography
Hardawan Mahmoud Kakashekh
Image and Description
AN EXAMPLE OF BAATHS SOCIALISM AND DEMOCRACY IN KURDISTAN OF IRAQ
Biography
Zeynep Kaya
Articles
US Senators introduce bill seeking sanctions on Turkey
Image and Description
Kurdish Jews from Mahabad (Saujbulak), Kurdistan, 1910
Articles
Afrin, the big prison. “Update on the human rights situation in Afrin July & August 2020”
Biography
Hanifi Baris
Image and Description
A Kurdish army in Istanbul to participate in the Battle of the Dardanelles in 1918
Archaeological places
Mosque (Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi) in the city of Faraqin
Biography
Hafiz Akdemir
Articles
German FM labels Kobane as a symbol of Kurdish resistance against ISIS
Image and Description
The Kurdish Quarter, which is located at the bottom of Mount Canaan in Safed, Palestine in 1946
Archaeological places
Cendera Bridge
Library
International Energy Agency: Iraq Energy Outlook
Library
Trial Monitoring Program Report
Archaeological places
The tomb of the historian Marduk Kurdistani
Biography
Jasmin Moghbeli

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